Activity of salivary glands in secreting honey‐elaborating enzymes in two subspecies of honeybee (Apis mellifera L)

Aliaa A. Al-Sherif,Adel M. Mazeed, Mohamed A. Ewis, Emad A. Nafea, El-Seid E. Hagag, Ahmed A. Kamel

PHYSIOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY(2017)

引用 9|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
The activity of invertase, glucose oxidase and amylase in the cephalic (post-cerebral) and thoracic salivary glands is determined in Egyptian and Carniolan honeybees (Apis mellifera L). For this purpose, three ages of worker bees are selected for enzyme assays. The results show that the three target enzymes are detected in the two glands during the three worker ages, except invertase, which cannot be detected in the cephalic gland of newly emerged bees of both subspecies. In both glands, the secretion of invertase is highest, followed by amylase and then glucose oxidase. In Carniolan bees, invertase secretion of the cephalic and thoracic glands increases gradually with age. In Egyptian bees, invertase increases with age only in the cephalic gland, whereas, in the thoracic gland, the highest secretion activity is detected in 10-15-day-old bees. The highest amounts of glucose oxidase and amylase in the cephalic gland are detected in newly emerged individuals of both Egyptian and Carniolan bees. In the thoracic gland, however, the highest activity of both enzymes is recorded only in newly emerged Egyptian bees. The results are discussed in the light of bee management and biological aspects of the two subspecies.
更多
查看译文
关键词
amylase,Apis mellifera lamarckii,Apis mellifera carnica,cephalic and thoracic glands,foragers,glucose oxidase,invertase,newly emerged bees,nurse bees
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要